Publication | Open Access
Identification of Environmental and Contextual Driving Factors of Air Conditioning Usage Behaviour in the Sydney Residential Buildings
13
Citations
28
References
2021
Year
EngineeringUrban Energy ModelingEnergy EfficiencyAir Pollution FiltrationAir QualityGreen BuildingSydney Residential BuildingsBuilding Energy ConservationSocial SciencesBuilt EnvironmentOccupant ComfortEnvironmental HealthEnergy AssessmentUrban GreeningAir ConditioningEnergy ConsumptionBehavioral SciencesIndoor Test RangesDesignBuilding EnergySubtropical Sydney RegionIndoor ClimateEnergy ManagementBuilding ScienceIndoor Air QualityAir PollutionUrban ClimateContextual Driving Factors
Air conditioning (A/C) is generally responsible for a significant proportion of total building energy consumption. However, occupants’ air conditioning usage patterns are often unrealistically characterised in building energy performance simulation tools, which leads to a gap between simulated and actual energy use. The objective of this study was to develop a stochastic model for predicting occupant behaviour relating to A/C cooling and heating in residential buildings located in the Subtropical Sydney region of Australia. Multivariate logistic regression was used to estimate the probability of using A/C in living rooms and bedrooms, based on a range of physical environmental (outdoor and indoor) and contextual (season, day of week, and time of day) factors observed in 42 Sydney region houses across a two-year monitoring period. The resulting models can be implemented in building energy performance simulation (BEPS) tools to more accurately predict indoor environmental conditions and energy consumption attributable to A/C operation.
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